AI Article Synopsis

  • The acquisition of neuronal signals is complicated by distortions from various physiological sources, making it challenging to analyze these signals accurately.
  • Existing manual methods to clean these signals are slow and often ineffective, particularly when global artefacts affect many channels at once.
  • A new machine learning model introduced in this study can independently identify and correct these artefactual segments without disrupting the overall signal, and it has been integrated into the SANTIA toolbox for wider community application.

Article Abstract

Acquisition of neuronal signals involves a wide range of devices with specific electrical properties. Combined with other physiological sources within the body, the signals sensed by the devices are often distorted. Sometimes these distortions are visually identifiable, other times, they overlay with the signal characteristics making them very difficult to detect. To remove these distortions, the recordings are visually inspected and manually processed. However, this manual annotation process is time-consuming and automatic computational methods are needed to identify and remove these artefacts. Most of the existing artefact removal approaches rely on additional information from other recorded channels and fail when global artefacts are present or the affected channels constitute the majority of the recording system. Addressing this issue, this paper reports a novel channel-independent machine learning model to accurately identify and replace the artefactual segments present in the signals. Discarding these artifactual segments by the existing approaches causes discontinuities in the reproduced signals which may introduce errors in subsequent analyses. To avoid this, the proposed method predicts multiple values of the artefactual region using long-short term memory network to recreate the temporal and spectral properties of the recorded signal. The method has been tested on two open-access data sets and incorporated into the open-access SANTIA (SigMate Advanced: a Novel Tool for Identification of Artefacts in Neuronal Signals) toolbox for community use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8741911PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40708-021-00149-xDOI Listing

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